On 8/23/06, Rahul Akolkar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
<snip/>

I tried to be careful in phrasing that, but didn't have much success
;-) Ofcourse, setting a m2 repository in personal webspace will be no
fun (and a waste of time), but just posting the artifacts there (not
in any particular repository layout) might be possible.

<snap/>

Seems cocoon had a "staging" repo in personal webspace ;-) (see
repository@ post a few minutes ago).

Anyway, the other alternative would be to have an ASF wide
test/staging repo, if at all that is possible.

-Rahul



For simplicity, lets say we have a simple project which produces just
one artifact, foo.jar (yes, I oversimplified!). I can do a "mvn
compile" and scp foo.jar (with sums and sigs) to ~rahul. If folks
think its OK (they will have to deploy manually to local repo), we
deploy to the remote repo(s) of choice. I claim that the extra effort
required to manually deploy the artifacts in the local repo (by folks
who are testing it) actually works in our favor, since there is little
chance to accidently acquire the artifact (as against the apache
snapshot repos, which are fairly "well-known") and thereby, forget to
replace it with the "final" v1.0.3.

-Rahul

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